Yep....plus the definition of "disability" has been broadened to include things like:
Alcoholism
Drug addiction
Chronic obesity
Depression
Bipolar Syndrome
Pretty much anyone who can find a doctor to sign off on it, and an attorney to fight the rejections will end up on it.
On and on......instead of aiding the truly disabled, it has become just another form of welfare.
doc
This is something that baffles me.
A guy I knew had had bypass surgery 10 years ago or so when he was in his late 30's. He continued to smoke, which is, of course, proscribed behavior if they've taken a vein out of your leg and rebuilt your coronary arteries.
Fast forward to December 2009 when the guy develops heart problems (again), pneumonia, and lands in the hospital. (Keep in mind that 3 years or so he graduated from the state penal system and is unemployable.)
He mucks around trying to earn enough to pay his child support and his grocery bills (not to mention his cigarettes), but puts in a claim to SS to be put on disability. Ultimately he succeeds, the process taking only about 3 months or so.
Six months later he dies of a heart attack (this past May), never having quit the habit.

Lest this thing sounds like a cigarette-bashing, rest assured the issue has more to do with the kinds of things that "qualify" under SS disability any more. Amazing....